- Front side: Not allowed
- Back side: Any VLT allowed
- Rear: Any VLT allowed
- Front side: Not allowed
- Back side: Any VLT allowed
- Rear: Any VLT allowed
Same as sedan rules.
- Windshield
- Non-reflective tint is permitted on the top 4 inches of the windshield.
- Reflectivity (front)
- Reflective tint not allowed
- Reflectivity (back)
- Reflective tint not allowed
- Side mirrors if back tinted
- Dual outside mirrors are required if rear-window tint limits visibility.
- Restricted colors
- Red, amber, and other colored tint that resembles emergency or signal lighting is prohibited.
- Sticker requirement
- A compliance sticker is not required by statute.
- Manufacturer certificate
- Film manufacturer certification is not required by statute.
- Medical exemption
- Available. Vermont prohibits aftermarket tint on the front windshield and front side windows. Back side and rear windows may be any darkness. Medical exemptions are available through the Vermont DMV.
What to show the officer
- Your film manufacturer’s certificate or installation receipt, kept in the glovebox. (Film manufacturer certification is not required by statute.)
- Post-installation VLT reading receipt if you have one (tint shops will print it free on request).
- If you hold a Vermont medical tint exemption, carry the official permit, physician form, or ID card in the vehicle at all times.
- Know the ±3% meter tolerance. If your window reads Not allowed, a reading of (minimum − 3%) or higher is within tolerance. See our Vermont meter tolerance page.
Pre-install checklist
- Confirm your vehicle’s classification (passenger car vs MPV/SUV) via the door-jamb label.
- Choose a VLT at or above the Not allowed minimum for front side windows.
- Verify the film meets the Vermont reflectivity cap.
- Use a manufacturer-certified installer (3M Pro Dealer, LLumar SelectPro, SunTek Pro Tint, or Solar Gard). See how to find a good tint shop.
- Require a printed post-install VLT reading for every window.
- Store the manufacturer certificate + installer warranty with vehicle registration.
Vermont official references
Why you should carry a printed tint reference card
A single-page, printed reference card in the glovebox is the cheapest insurance you can carry against a wrongful tint stop in Vermont. During a roadside conversation with an officer, being able to hand over a concise document that:
- Cites the current Vermont VLT minimums for your vehicle class,
- Lists the reflectivity cap,
- References the state statute or administrative code,
- Shows your film brand, VLT, and install date,
… accomplishes several things at once. It demonstrates that you understand the law, it narrows the question to a straightforward reading, and it gives the officer something to anchor their notes on. Many stops end in a warning once the officer sees that the driver has done their homework.
What else to keep with your reference card
A complete glovebox tint-documentation kit for Vermont includes:
- This reference card, printed single-sided on letter or A4 paper.
- Your installer’s original invoice showing film brand, model, rated VLT for each window, and install date. This establishes what was installed and proves the work was done by a professional.
- The manufacturer warranty certificate (3M, LLumar, SunTek, Solar Gard, XPEL, etc.). This lets the officer verify the film is a legitimate named product, not an uncertified import.
- A copy of your most recent VLT meter reading if you have one — taken by the installer at install or by a tint shop any time the film was re-measured.
- Medical exemption documentation, if applicable. Either the state-issued permit/sticker or the signed physician certification.
- Vehicle registration and proof of insurance. Standard glovebox items, but confirm they are current and accessible.
Store all these documents in a single labeled envelope. If you are stopped, you hand the officer the envelope, not a stack of loose papers.
When to update your reference card
- After each state legislative session (January–June typically), check whether the Vermont tint statute has been amended. Our state pages are updated on a 6-month review cycle — the footer of your state page shows when it was last reviewed.
- After any new tint install or film replacement, re-print the card with the updated film brand, VLT, and install date.
- Annually on your inspection date (in states with annual inspection), print a fresh card while you are gathering the other documents for inspection.
- After you move or register the vehicle in a new state, print the new state’s reference card immediately — old cards become misleading the moment you cross state lines with updated plates.
Vermont reference card FAQ
What is the minimum legal tint in Vermont?
On a passenger car front side window, Not allowed. Back side and rear window rules may differ — see the table on this page or the full <a href="/states/vermont/">Vermont tint law page</a>.
Can I print this reference card?
Yes. Use your browser's Print function (Ctrl+P or Cmd+P). The card is optimized for letter-size paper and is glovebox-friendly.
Is this card a legal document?
No. It is a summary reference for quick checks during officer interactions and shop visits. Law enforcement and courts rely on the actual statute text. See the <a href="#references">official references</a> section for the primary sources.
How often is this card updated?
We review Vermont window tint law and this card at least annually. Last reviewed: 2026-01-15. Material changes since that date may not yet be reflected; always confirm before installing.